
Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-13886-5 - European Constitutional Law: Second Edition Robert Schütze Excerpt More information Part I Constitutional Foundations The European Union has existed for over half a century. It originates in the will of six European States to cooperate closer in the area of coal and steel. Since 1952, the European Union has significantly grown – both geographically and thematically. It has today 28 Member States and acts in almost all areas of modern life. Its constitu- tional and institutional structures have also dramatically changed in the past six decades. The Union’s remarkable constitutional evolution is discussed in Chapter 1. What type of legal ‘animal’ is the European Union? Chapter 2 analyses this question from a comparative constitutional perspective. We shall see that the Union is not a State but constitutes a ‘Federation of States’. Standing in between international and national law, the Union’s federal character thereby expresses itself in a number of normative and institutional ways. Chapters 3 and 4 explore the two key normative qualities of European Union law, namely its ‘direct effect’ and its ‘supremacy’. Chapters 5 and 6 then look at the institutional structure of the European Union. Each Union institu- tion will here be analysed as regards its composition, powers and procedures. The interplay between the various institutions in discharging the Union’s governmental functions will be discussed in Part II. 1 Constitutional History: From Paris to Lisbon 3 2 Constitutional Nature: A Federation of States 43 3 European Law I: Nature – Direct Effect 77 4 European Law II: Nature – Supremacy/Pre-emption 117 5 Governmental Structure: Union Institutions I 147 6 Governmental Structure: Union Institutions II 185 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-13886-5 - European Constitutional Law: Second Edition Robert Schütze Excerpt More information © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-13886-5 - European Constitutional Law: Second Edition Robert Schütze Excerpt More information 1 Constitutional History From Paris to Lisbon Contents Introduction 3 1. From Paris to Rome: The European Coal and Steel Community 7 a. The (Supranational) Structure of the ECSC 8 b. The (Failed) European Defence Community 10 2. From Rome to Maastricht: The European (Economic) Community 12 a. Normative Supranationalism: The Nature of European Law 13 b. Decisional Supranationalism: The Governmental Structure 14 c. Intergovernmental Developments outside the EEC 18 d. Supranational and Intergovernmental Reforms through the Single European Act 20 3. From Maastricht to Nice: The (Old) European Union 22 a. The Temple Structure: The Three Pillars of the (Maastricht) Union 23 aa. The First Pillar: The European Communities 24 bb. The Second Pillar: Common Foreign and Security Policy 26 cc. The Third Pillar: Justice and Home Affairs 27 b. A Decade of ‘Constitutional Bricolage’: Amsterdam and Nice 27 aa. The Amsterdam Treaty: Dividing the Third Pillar 28 bb. The Nice Treaty: Limited Institutional Reform 30 4. From Nice to Lisbon: The (New) European Union 32 a. The (Failed) Constitutional Treaty: Formal ‘Total Revision’ 33 b. The Lisbon Treaty: Substantive ‘Total Revision’ 36 Conclusion 39 Further Reading 41 Introduction The idea of European unification is as old as the European idea of the sovereign 1 State. Yet the spectacular rise of the latter overshadowed the idea of European union for centuries. Within the twentieth century, two ruinous world wars and the social forces of globalisation have increasingly discredited the idea of the 1 R. H. Foerster, Die Idee Europa 1300–1946, Quellen zur Geschichte der politischen Einigung (Deutscher Taschenbuchverlag, 1963). © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-13886-5 - European Constitutional Law: Second Edition Robert Schütze Excerpt More information 4 Constitutional Foundations sovereign State. The decline of the monadic State found expression in the spread of 2 inter-state cooperation. And the rise of international cooperation caused a fundamental transformation in the substance and structure of international law. The changed reality of international relations necessitated a change in the theory 3 of international law. The various efforts at European cooperation after the Second World War formed part of this general transition from an international law of coex- 4 istence to an international law of cooperation. ‘Europe was beginning to 5 get organised.’ This development began with three international organisa- tions. First: the Organisation for European Economic Cooperation (1948), which had been created after the Second World War by 16 European States to administer the international aid offered by the United States for 6 European reconstruction. Secondly, the Western European Union (1948, 7 1954) that established a security alliance to prevent another war in Europe. Thirdly, the Council of Europe (1949), which had inter alia been founded 8 to protect human rights and fundamental freedoms in Europe. None of 2 G. Schwarzenberger, The Frontiers of International Law (Stevens, 1962). 3 C. de Visscher, Theory and Reality in Public International Law (Princeton University Press, 1968). 4 W. G. Friedmann, The Changing Structure of International Law (Stevens, 1964). 5 A. H. Robertson, European Institutions: Co-operation, Integration, Unification (Stevens & Sons, 1973), 17. 6 The ‘European Recovery Programme’,alsoknownasthe‘Marshall Plan’,wasnamed after the (then) Secretary of State of the United States, George C. Marshall. Art. 1 of the OEEC Treaty stated: ‘The Contracting Parties agree to work in close cooperation in their economic relations with one another. As their immediate task, they will undertake the elaboration and execution of a joint recovery programme.’ In 1960, the OEEC was transformed into the thematically broader Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) with the United States and Canada becoming full members of that organisation. 7 Art. IV of the 1948 Brussels Treaty stated: ‘If any of the High Contracting Parties should be the object of an armed attack in Europe, the other High Contracting Parties will, in accordance with the provisions of Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, afford the party so attacked all the military and other aid and assistance in their power.’ 8 According to Art. 1 of the Statute of the Council of Europe, its aim ‘is to achieve a greater unity between its Members for the purpose of safeguarding and realising the ideals and principles which are their common heritage and facilitating their economic and social progress’ (ibid., para. a). This aim was to be pursued through common organs ‘by discussion of questions of common concern and by agreements and common action in economic, social, cultural, scientific, legal and administrative matters and in the maintenance and further realisation of human rights and funda- mental freedoms’ (ibid., para. b). The most important expression of this second aim was the development of a common standard of human rights in the form of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). The Convention was signed in 1950 and entered into force in 1953. The Convention established a European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg (1959). © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-13886-5 - European Constitutional Law: Second Edition Robert Schütze Excerpt More information Constitutional History: From Paris to Lisbon 5 these grand international organisations was to lead to the European Union. The birth of the latter was to take place in a much humbler sector. The 1951 Treaty of Paris set up the European Coal and Steel 9 Community (ECSC). Its original members were six European States: Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. The Community had been created to integrate one industrial sector; and the very concept of integration indicated the wish of the contracting States ‘to break with the ordinary forms of international treaties and 10 organisations’. The Treaty of Paris led to the 1957 Treaties of Rome. The latter created two additional Communities: the European Atomic Energy Community and the European (Economic) Community. The ‘three Communities’ were partly 11 ‘merged’ in 1967, but continued to exist in relative independence. A major organisational leap was taken in 1993, when the Maastricht Treaty integrated the three Communities into the European Union. But for a decade, the Treaty on European Union was under constant constitutional construction. And in an attempt to prepare the Union for the twenty-first century, a European Convention was charged to draft a Constitutional Treaty in 2001. Yet the latter failed; and it took almost another decade to rescue the reform as the 2007 Reform (Lisbon) Treaty. The latter replaced the ‘old’ European Union with the ‘new’ European Union. This chapter surveys the historical evolution of the European Union in four sections. Section 1 starts with the humble origins of the Union: the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC). While limited in its scope, the ECSC introduced a supranational formula that was to become the trademark of the European Economic Community (EEC). The European Economic Community will be analysed in section 2, while section 3 investigates the development of the (old) European
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